Angola Cinemas: A fiction of freedom
By (Author) Walter Fernandes
By (author) MiguelHurst Hurst
Edited by Christiane Schulte
Edited by Gabriele Stiller-Kern
Edited by Miguel Hurst
Steidl Publishers
Steidl Verlag
20th June 2015
20th April 2015
Germany
General
Non Fiction
Individual photographers
779.092
Hardback
240
Width 295mm, Height 210mm
1580g
Angola Cinema honors the unique, fantastic and unknown architecture of movie theaters in Angola, built in the decades before the end of Portuguese colonial rule in 1975. Initially designed as traditional closed spaces, open-air cinemas with terrace bars became the order of the day, better suited as they were to a tropical climate. The arrival of these cinemas in the 1960s brought atmosphere and elegance to the experience of going to the movies; but these urban cathedrals were also, importantly, a place where social barriers dissolved and where liberation from colonialism was possible. Walter Fernandes' (born 1979) photographs offer not only an examination of the architectural history of these buildings, but also an important document of urban organization in the twentieth century, as well as the changing mentalities of a society living with the prospect of its independence.